|
Adobe Acrobat Professional 9 |  | From: Adobe Category: Software
List Price: $449.00 Buy New: $134.95 as of 3/12/2010 15:51 EST details You Save: $314.05 (70%)
New (18) Used (1) from $134.95
Seller: wvanhookii Rating: 28 reviews Sales Rank: 62
Format: DVD-ROM Platforms: Windows Vista, Windows 7, Windows XP, Windows Media: DVD-ROM Edition: Full Autographed: No Memorabilia: No Operating System: Windows Vista Shipping Weight (lbs): 1 Dimensions (in): 1.9 x 7.9 x 5.7
MPN: 22020737 Model: 22020738 UPC: 883919145518 EAN: 0883919145518 ASIN: B0018VF9EW
Release Date: June 26, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
| |
| Features:
| • | Deliver the richest, most engaging PDF communications anytime, anywhere | | • | Unify the widest range of content--including documents, spreadsheets, e-mail, images, video, 3D, and maps--in a single compressed and organized PDF Portfolio | | • | Collaborate through shared document reviews, help protect and control sensitive information--quickly gain the input you need to efficiently develop and complete work | | • | Simplify the creation and completion of forms to efficiently analyze and use data | | • | Includes professional templates for PDF portfolios, Adobe Reader review and commenting, LiveCycle Designer ES for dynamic forms |
|
| Similar Items:
| |
| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description Communicate and collaborate more effectively and securely with Adobe Acrobat 9 Pro. Unify a wide range of content into a single, organized PDF Portfolio. Collaborate through electronic document reviews. Create and manage dynamic forms. And help protect sensitive information.
Scan paper documents to PDF and automatically recognize text Save PDFs as Word documents 256-bit encryption Apply restrictions on printing, etc Examine documents for hidden information and delete as needed Merge files from multiple applications Assemble a wide range of content types Familiar commenting tools such as sticky notes Manage shared document reviews that allow participants to see one another's comments Synchronized document views and chat Digitally sign PDFs Certify PDFs using digital IDs Create fillable PDF forms from paper or existing files Distribute and track PDF forms Let users of Reader (8 or later) to fill in & save PDF forms locally, and to digitally sign PDFs Convert documents for archiving Validate documents for conformance to ISO standards Permanently delete sensitive info Compare & highlight the differences between 2 PDFs Prepare PDFs for high-end print production Create & validate accessible PDFs Insert FLV or H.264 video for playback in Acrobat & Reader Convert AutoCAD, Visio, and Microsoft Project files to PDF, preserving document layers in Visio and AutoCAD and object data in Visio Convert Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Publisher, and Access files to PDF Archive e-mail or e-mail folders from Microsoft Outlook or Lotus Notes Create dynamic XML forms with LiveCycle Designer ES (included) Windows XP / Server 2003 / Vista
Communicate and collaborate more effectively and securely. Unify a wide range of content in a single organized PDF Portfolio. Collaborate through electronic document reviews. Create and manage dynamic forms. And help protect sensitive information. Communicate and collaborate more easily and securely with Adobe PDF. For a more in-depth comparison, download a feature comparison (PDF format). | Deliver professional documents Easily organize content from a variety of sources--including documents, e-mail, images, spreadsheets, and web pages--in a single searchable PDF Portfolio, compressed for easy distribution. Use professionally designed templates that can be branded with your company logo and colors. Quickly integrate content, define navigation, and add polish to communicate clearly and effectively. Share information with anyone using free Adobe Reader software. Create and manage forms Simplify the creation and completion of forms to efficiently analyze and use data. Convert Word and Excel documents or scanned paper to PDF forms with automatic recognition of fillable fields. Or use Adobe LiveCycle Designer ES software, a professional form design tool included with Acrobat 9 Pro software, to further customize and automate dynamic XML forms. Extend Acrobat functionality to Reader users so virtually anyone can participate in the workflows you initiate. Use the Form Tracker to see when forms have been completed and who has completed them. And easily export data to a spreadsheet for analysis and reporting. Manage document reviews Accelerate the exchange of ideas with colleagues, extended teams, and customers. Through easy-to-manage electronic document reviews, participants can see and build on other reviewers' comments as they are being made, so you can quickly gain the input and consensus you need to efficiently develop and complete work. Enable virtually anyone using free Adobe Reader software to participate in reviews, and use the Form Tracker to monitor progress and participation. Combine multiple files in a searchable PDF Portfolio, compressed for easy distribution. Brand it with your logo and include descriptions to guide recipients through the contents. | Acrobat lets you combine files from multiple applications into a single Adobe PDF document. | With a scanner and Acrobat's Optical Character Recognition (OCR) technology, you can turn stacks of paper documents into easily searchable electronic PDF archives. | Help protect sensitive information Control access to and use of PDF documents, assign digital rights, and maintain document integrity. Set document permissions to define whether a file can be printed or changed. Apply passwords to help restrict document access. Use redaction tools to permanently remove sensitive information. Digitally sign and certify documents to validate they came from a trusted source. Create and reuse document security policies to precisely manage who can print, save, copy, or modify a document. Top reasons to buy Acrobat 9 Pro Deliver a compelling branded experience using PDF Portfolios Bring multiple files together in a single organized and interactive PDF Portfolio. Use professionally designed templates that can be branded with your logo and include descriptions to guide recipients through the contents. Help protect your documents Use passwords to control access to PDF documents. Use permissions to restrict printing, copying, or altering. Save passwords and permissions as security policies that can be easily applied to new PDF files. Easily create and manage electronic forms Build dynamic forms, distribute and track forms and responses, and easily export data for analysis and reporting. Manage and track electronic document reviews Gain the input you need through interactive document reviews that enable participants to see and build on other reviewers' comments, which can be sorted by author, date, or page. Use the Form Tracker to monitor progress and participation. Include Adobe Reader users Enable users of free Adobe Reader software to digitally sign documents, participate in shared document reviews, and save forms locally. By extending Acrobat functionality to Reader users, virtually anyone can participate in the workflows you initiate. Synchronize document views Provide clarity and enhance discussion by e-mailing a PDF document and walking recipients through it in real time by controlling the exact page view they see. Remove sensitive information Use redaction tools to black out sensitive text, illustrations, or other information, permanently deleting the content from the PDF document. Inspect PDF documents for metadata, hidden layers, and other concealed information, and remove before distributing to others. Compare PDF documents Automatically highlight the differences between two versions of a PDF document, including text and images, so you can quickly and easily identify what has changed. Improve print processes Help control costs and reduce errors with automated output controls to preview, preflight, correct, and prepare PDF files for high-end print production and digital publishing. Create and validate accessible PDF documents Ensure your PDF documents are optimized for people with disabilities. Quickly evaluate, correct, and automatically tag PDF documents for optimized accessibility and reflow.
|
| Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 28
Adobe Acrobat Pro February 7, 2010 S. Samelson 7 out of 9 found this review helpful
Problems with Adobe Acrobat
The following relates signficant functional problems with Acrobat which I have encountered. These include:
1. interminable interruption by error popups that cannot be stopped,
2. alteration of my documents to unusable forms (OCR rotates some pages that should not be rotated),
3. inability to convert some hyperlinked Word documents to PDF,
4. alterations of document identifying metadata that I have entered into Acrobat dialog boxes,
5. difficulty in performing common bookeeping tasks globally (such as changing zoom size for all bookmarks),
6. program crashes (when using split screen and editing bookmarks),
7. inability to change default settings that persist (such as getting Adobe not to put my name on all comments and other markups),
8. intermittent crashes when attempting OCR,
9. messages that the Acrobat Organizer database is damaged that cannot be stopped,
10. Acrobat cannot read a document (text to speech) that it did the OCR on if the document has more than one page, and
11. poor accuracy OCR.
Acrobat automatic updates flashes uncontrollable popup windows on your screen as fast as you close them, under certain circumstances. This is extremely annoying in that it is difficult or impossible to turn off. You cannot turn automatic updates off in the only place that would make sense to look for stopping this feature, and you cannot turn it off without connecting to the internet to update first - Adobe requires you to interrupt whatever important work you are busy with to take care of this mundane housekeeping task at their convenience. You would expect to find the option to turn off automatic updates in the preferences section, but it is not there. Adobe's totally nonintuitive place to stick this is under the Help dropdown, at Check for Updates. You are then forced to connect to internet and update before getting to the option to turn off automatic updates. If you use a firewall to block Acrobat from connecting to internet, Acrobat continuously attempts to connect to the internet (I repeat - endlessly) with a new popup window immediately appearing every time you tell it not to connect. Acrobat should behave like most other software in the universe - ask your preference before doing something. When you are working under time deadlines, say for a grad school thesis or a journal article submission, you do not want software interrupting your work or slowing down your computer to connect to the internet to check for updates. The user should be able to turn such activities off instantly and easily and get back to their work and not be bothered again. The user should be able to use a software firewall to block all internet activity or any specific software by their choice and not have the software refuse accept their wishes and keep sprouting an infinite number of popup windows on the computer screen. This can be especially irritating, say while at a university library downloading research articles, at which time Acrobat automatic updates endlessly interrupts your work. After one or two unsuccessful attempts to connect to update, Acrobat should just plain stop. Software programmers should never leave such closed loops in their code - a user should always be able to opt out.
Adobe Acrobat OCR will rotate some pages with graphs to a totally useless sideways layout and does not provide any means to correct the wrong orientation. Acrobat OCR took a page (regular 8.5 x 11 inches) with a lot of print oriented in the usual horizontal layout, but with one graph with the vertical axis labeled with a single word oriented vertically. Acrobat OCR then rotated the page 90 degrees clockwise because of this single word, rather than leave the page oriented the proper way to read the other roughly 300 words. There was no way to change the page orientation back to the obvious correct layout, so you would have to choose between no OCR or wrong layout.
If you need to change the zoom level of multiple bookmarks in one easy operation, good luck finding the answer - especially from Adobe. Not being able to accomplish this can make it difficult changing to a paperless office. Say you receive a document with bookmarks, and the person who created that document happened to accept the default zoom level that presents the pages of those bookmarks at an unreadable zoom (like fitting the whole page on the screen). Try to get Acrobat to change the zoom of all the bookmarks globally to a readable level, and most users will likely set all the destinations to one location doing that. You can change them one by one. Or, you can learn Javascript, but the script that actually works to globally change the zoom level of all bookmarks is hard to find. You could also purchase some expensive pharmacy oriented software that will do this function. There actually is a way to accomplish this in Acrobat 8 and 9, but the method is difficult to uncover. This capability has been frequently requested by users, and should be better covered in the help file or user manual, or the process should be made more intuitive.
Adobe Acrobat failed to correctly convert a Word document with internal navigational hyperlinks - while a different PDF creator from another company worked with complete accuracy. The Word document was 100 pages long, contained a 3 page contents section with navigational Word hyperlinks to each chapter, and each page had hyperlinks back to the contents - an only mildly complicated structure. Most of the hyperlinks were missing or did not work in the PDF created by Acrobat, but all worked well in the PDF created by another software.
In the properties dialog box for a PDF document, Acrobat will alter what you enter in the author box. If you enter multiple authors, using commas and semi-colons, and type the last name first - all components of the usual type of bibliographic formatting required for listing authors, Acrobat changes your punctuation so the entry turns into nonsense. If you want the entry to remain as you did it, you must use quotes at both ends - good luck trying to find that info from Adobe, too. Why should the user be required to perform a work-around? Acrobat should leave what you entered exactly as you entered it.
After creating a PDF of images (200-400 pages to make a book), using the split screen viewing option while entering bookmarks for the chapters causes Acrobat to crash and lose all the work related to the bookmarks. Split screen could be useful in that you can have the table of contents open in the top and use the bottom window to go to the destination and create the bookmark, except that this crashes Acrobat. That can be 15-30 minutes of work evaporated in a split second. This type of crash occurs frequently. To avoid a loss of work, save your work after every bookmark change, especially before closing a split screen.
Acrobat crashes frequently when editing small 20-30 page documents, while simply deleting some pages and bookmarks.
Another annoyance is that Acrobat captures the user name from Windows sign-on and automatically enters this as a label in all comments and other markups. There is no option to change the name or simply not to add the name to comments. Well, you can change it temporarily, but when you exit Acrobat, the change is lost. Most of the time, I do not want my name plastered on every comment I make. If the PDF is for my own use, I don't need to see my name over and over on every comment I entered in a journal article while reading it. If I intend to provide the PDF to students, I again do not want my name associated with comments I provide (who knows where this PDF may go). Adobe should make identifying information placed on comments modifiable, optional, and persistent, according to the user's wishes - not Adobe's conception that these comments are always going to be used for group collaboration over a PDF and require personal identification of every comment.
Adobe crashes intermittently when attempting to do OCR on a scanned document, and says it cannot load the OCR module. It is not clear if any specific conditions cause this. Occasionally, closing Acrobat and reopening resolves the problem. Often, it has required repair (reinstallation) of the program, and even though the installation files were saved on the hard drive at the initial installation, the repair process takes 20-30 minutes. If you are in the middle of some important work and/or on a tight time schedule, this is quite an unwelcome delay.
Despite having the default settings at not having Adobe keep track of PDF documents, at some point a message comes up that the Acrobat Organizer database is damaged, and telling you to close your browser (which was not open). Once this error message appears, you can't get it to go away. Even deleting all the files in the Organizer doesn't work. You have to reinstall Acrobat, but the error message will eventually reappear. This has lasted through several versions of Acrobat, and is annoying.
If you ever use the reading (text to speech) feature in Acrobat, it will not work on a document that you scan in and do OCR on, if the document has more than one page. It just says "Warning, blank." If you create the pages individually, Acrobat can read each page. If you are going to use the text to speech feature, you certainly would expect Adobe to make sure it works on a multipage document that Acrobat itself has performed the OCR on.
Another disappointment is the poor accuracy with OCR. Acrobat's OCR makes many more errors per page, even with high resolution scans at 300 dpi and higher, compared to stand-alone OCR programs. And the errors are difficult to correct, if at all. The only thing the OCR is good for is to allow you to highlight text you want to mark.
A number of inconveniences slowing your work with Acrobat also exist. Such as being required to click the mouse button once for every line up (or down) you want to move a page when creating a multipage document. You can grab and slide a page up, but then you can move it only as far as the number of pages visible in the assembly window, requiring multiple steps for the move either way. You should be able to continuously move a page by holding a mouse button, or simultaneously pressing another key and holding a mouse button. Overlooking this potential timesaver for users requires office staff converting scanned longer paper documents to waste a great deal of time. Despite organizing a file pre-scanning, there are always a few pages out of order, or that need to be added later.
For me, the above problems render Adobe Acrobat more trouble than it's worth. Many of the problems involve basic functionality and should have been easy to fix with minimal programming. Adobe has added all sorts of fancy features like print preflight and conferencing that may be of use to a much smaller number of users, but has failed to provide basic features and stability that would be expected to be present or corrected in a document handling program that has been around for so long. These Acrobat problems interrupt and stop your work. The problems also include not being able to convert routine documents to PDF (Word), altering documents to unusable form (OCR rotated pages), changing the data you enter (properties - authors), lack of basic commonly needed features (modifying user name for comments, easy global zoom of bookmarks), error messages that cannot be stopped, and instability (software crashes with split screen and OCR) with loss of work. Acrobat's OCR is not at a reasonable standard and should be more easily correctable. And there are just plain inconveniences, too. For some problems, there are awkward work-arounds and for others, no fixes. Acrobat is far overpriced for this level of functionality. It doesn't work properly and conveniently, the company is unresponsive to user needs, and there are decent alternatives for various PDF purposes.
avast ye, matey (updated) January 12, 2010 PooBear (USA) 5 out of 6 found this review helpful
Some of the low-cost offerings of Adobe Acrobat V9 Pro for sale here by third-parties are professional, shrink-wrapped pirate forgeries in retail box replicas.
The sellers themselves may be unaware, especially in the case of a sealed retail package. They really do look like the real deal.
Apparently, such purchases are protected by Amazon's a-z policy, if purchased through an Amazon storefront. So, if it turns up a lemon you are just out a little time. Otherwise, you get a heck of a good deal. Be sure to check yours carefully.
Me, Im out a little time.
Hope you fare better.
Just fyi
Update:
-------
Are you unintentionally selling pirated Adobe software? Here are some things I noticed between pirated and genuine Adobe Acrobat V9.0 Pro software, as I (unfortunately) had the honor of seeing both kinds. Without disturbing the shrink-wrap clear plastic packaging you can check these things:
1. The silkscreen package graphics, especially on the back, are fuzzy. The genuine packaging is sharp and clear.
2. The bottom of the genuine package will have affixed an Adobe security seal that is your typical multi-color, holographic design. The pirated box, of course, lacks this.
3. In my case, the pirated version lacked the "Only for Distribution in North America" sticker on the side of the box.
If you unwrap the clear shrink wrap, you will find that the pirate and genuine boxes look identical. However, in my case, the pirate boxes are extremely cheap and tear at the slightest provocation. Genuine packaging is clearly stout enough for years of opening and closing the box. Have you ever seen cheap Chinese cardboard? You will most likely on a pirated box. I also noticed:
1. The pirate version lacked a registration card.
2. The DVD case, though looking exactly like the original, was cheap and did not secure the DVD well.
3. The pirated DVD, held under a light, revealed scratches and fingerprints. Genuine DVDs are, of course, flawless.
4. If at this point you even dare to examine the DVD in a computer (I used a test computer with a restricted account) you may notice, as I did on my particular pirate DVD, a "Serial Fix" directory containing a message from the "MkDev Team Macedonia" purporting their cracked software to be "clean, no virus or spyware" (like they have my trust!). MkDev is a well-known pirate organization (Google 'mkdev cracks' to see this).
5. Also, even though the packaging was for Adobe Acrobat V9.0 Pro, the installation software was for Adobe Acrobat V9.0 Pro Extended.
The price being so low I did expect a forgery. It is nevertheless apparently a good idea to purchase online with a major credit card dedicated to online purchases, and from an Amazon storefront such that you get Amazon's A->Z protection as well. Have a good day.
Update: Replacing Adobe Acrobat V7.0 Pro with V9.0 Pro
------------------------------------------------------
I did not upgrade from 7.0, opting instead for the full version 9 product (I had had enough fun with the pirated software fiasco, and now my project was slipping).
My workstation is an old multi-processor Dell (2GB memory) running Windows Server 2003
and Office 2003. Installation removed my old 7.0, and I then tested 9.0 from inside
Microsoft Word on a 611 page science paper that has maybe 200-some illustrations & photos.
The install went fine, the integration with Word also no problems.
Printing to PDF consumed an additional 50mb of memory over baseline, a drop in the bucket. CPU usage would peak at 34% maximum during this time, dropping instantly to the teens. On average, CPU usage was about 18% during print to PDF.
Convert to PDF (from the "Adobe PDF" Word menu bar) used 10% more CPU on average, but the same amount of memory, with a 49% peak CPU. On average, CPU usage was about 28% during convert to PDF.
I then on-line updated to Adobe V9.3.0 (a free update). This seemed to improve
CPU utilization, peaking at 27% for the second test on the same file, after rebooting,
for print to PDF.
Baseline CPU was 3 - 9% for these tests, so subtract that from the above CPU percentages for a rough idea of Adobe 9.0 Pro.
Post-PDF checks in Adobe showed my PDF as expected (I embedded fonts, and created to
PDF/X1 profile). No issues at all, with my platform. A true drop-in replacement for
Adobe 7 pro, in my case.
Acrobat 5 works better for me November 16, 2009 jbat (Fla) 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
Pros: "looks nice"
Cons: Does not export pdf to other formats without a lot of errors ( ie Word docs, text, RTF etc)
Summary: I have version 5 and I like it better. I don't know why there are so many errors going from PDF to other formats. It makes it useless. I am glad I tried the 30 day trial and advise anyone to try it fully to see if it meets your needs. Sorry but for me, I'll stay with verion 5 and not upgrade.
Adobe disappoints - again... November 10, 2009 Robert M. Prince (Philadelphia, PA United States) 4 out of 4 found this review helpful
I haven't upgraded my Acrobat (not reader) for a long time so I decided the only way to overcome the major problems of using the upgrades I'd bought before was to start fresh and pay for the full version. I found Acrobat 9 on Amazon at a very reasonable price and paid the seller with my credit card. The seller sent the software promptly and when I installed it the version turned out not to be the version printed on the software box or label. I wrestled with Adobe's incompetent Customer Service people (English as a second language) for over two days and finally gave up. Fortunately the seller accepted my return of the product. Incidentally, I continued to use the installed software on a "trial" basis. Adobe seems to have taken their cues from Microsoft and spent their time developing bells and whistles that no one seems to want or be able to figure out how to use - just visit their user forums and you'll see what I mean...
Love it! Best thing I bought October 12, 2009 Tim Murphy (Denver, CO) 3 out of 4 found this review helpful
I bought this for my job because my boss wanted me to try to make my job paperless. I'm Accounts Payable, so needless to say I was baffled by how I was going to accomplish that task; I'm buried in paper everyday. I first bought Adobe Capture and while it was nice to covert files into PDF format it didn't allow me to make my job paperless nor were the files OCR searchable. I found Acrobat on Adobe's website and tried the trial version and I fell in love the first day. This software has made my job paperless and it's easy to use and I learn something new about it everyday that helps me out that much more!!
Showing reviews 1-5 of 28
|
|
|
CERTAIN CONTENT THAT APPEARS ON THIS SITE COMES FROM AMAZON SERVICES LLC. THIS CONTENT IS PROVIDED ‘AS IS’ AND IS SUBJECT TO CHANGE OR REMOVAL AT ANY TIME. | |